Robert Montgomery Bird (1805/6-1854) was a writer of
considerable note. Born in New Castle, Delaware, one hundred and ninety
years ago (February 5, 1805 or 1806), he was raised there and in
Philadelphia, and entered the University of Pennsylvania in 1824. He
graduated from Penn's Medical School and College of Pharmacy in 1827. As
a medical student, he was active in literary societies and as a fledgling
playwright.

He practiced medicine for a year after graduation, giving it up in
order to write. By 1830, Edwin Forrest, the greatest American tragic
actor and theatrical impresario of the era, had accepted one of his plays.
For the next seven years, Dr. Bird wrote for Forrest while also publishing
poetry, fiction, and essays. In 1837, he broke with Forrest, became
editor of the American Monthly Magazine, and married Mary Mayer.
Their son, Frederick Mayer Bird, was born a bit more than a year later.

Dr. Bird spent the 1840s uncertain about his future and suffering briefly
from mental illness. He tried a variety of fields: he farmed on
Maryland's Eastern Shore; returned to medicine as a medical school
professor; wrote a campaign biography for Zachary Taylor; considered a
possible political career; sought a position with the Smithsonian
Institution; became a bank director; and assumed an interest in the
North American Review, with which he eventually stayed, while
revising a novel for a new edition and (perhaps) revising other works, as
well.

If this were all, Dr. Bird might now merit only occasional recall as an
antebellum American man of letters. But there is more. When, in the
1840s, he returned to medicine as Professor of the Institutes of Medicine
and Materia Medica at the Pennsylvania Medical College, his scientific
interests found an additional outlet in "sun-painting," or
photography. This work remained completely unknown until 1992,
when the Library Company of Philadelphia acquired an archive documenting
Bird's photographic experiments during
the early 1850s.

The present exhibition reveals yet another aspect of Dr. Bird's creative
life: his art. Even as a young man, Bird drew and sketched; some
surviving works date from before he turned twenty. Later works record
scenes and impressions of Philadelphia, America, and Europe garnered
during many travels. These works survive in the care of Bird's family.
The core of what we show on this occasion, they display a freshness and
vivacity of vision clearly occasioned by Bird's genuine excitement in the
landscapes and figures he took such pleasure in depicting. Their
excitement is all the greater because they are, to this day, essentially
unknown.

Dr. Robert Montgomery Bird--"a man of high and exalted intelligence,"
according to his obituarist--died in January of 1854.

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Acknowledgments

The Library and the University are grateful for the generosity
of Dr. Bird's family, especially that of the present Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Montgomery Bird, who have loaned us his art works and some additional
materials for public exhibition. Without their willingness to allow these
materials to be seen--most for the first time--this exhibition would have
been unthinkable.

The majority of Dr. Bird's printed books, literary manuscripts, and
correspondence seen here come from Penn's own Library collections but--as
the gifts, extending over many years, of several generations of Dr. Bird's
descendants--they too testify to the ongoing generosity of his family.

This exhibition has benefitted also from the ongoing interest and
support of Michael T. Ryan, Director of Special Collections. That it
looks as good as it does is due to the exceptional work of Greg Bear,
exhibition coordinator for the Department of Special Collections.

Dr. Robert Montgomery Bird's University is pleased by this occasion to
mount an exhibition that shows how much remains, even at this late date,
to be learned about his activities in fields he is not generally known to
have explored. It is no small additional benefit of this exhibition that,
by also looking at his writing career, it shows how much sheer pleasure
Dr. Bird continues to provide, both as author and as
artist.